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« June 04, 2010 - July 04, 2010 »
 
06 / 4
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:30 pm

Initiative of anarchists and antiauthoritarians for discussion and coordination of actions in solidarity.

Meeting time- Friday 4/6/2010, 5pm Black Rose

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Winter is on it's way! Black Rose has a heater and we want to share it with you.

Join us for a social evening of games and conversation from 6:30

06 / 5
06 / 6
Start: 6:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Soylent Green is a 1973 American science fiction film directed by Richard Fleischer. Starring Charlton Heston. It depicts the investigation into the brutal murder of a wealthy businessman in a dystopian future suffering from pollution, overpopulation, depleted resources, poverty, dying oceans and a hot climate due to the greenhouse effect. Much of the population survives on processed food rations, including the eponymous "soylent green".

We'll we cracking out the popcorn for this one! A fabulous way to end a dreary wet weekend. $5 donation entry. 6:30pm this Sunday 6/6/2010

06 / 7
06 / 8
06 / 9
06 / 10
06 / 11
06 / 12
06 / 13
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

Sunday 13th (6pm)
The Battleship Potemkin
Sergei Eisenstein's classic film of the mutiny on the
Potemkin, made to coincide with celebrations for
the 20th anniversary of the unsuccessful
1905 Russian Revolution.
(1925 b/w, silent, 74 mins.) $5 donation

06 / 14
06 / 15
06 / 16
06 / 17
06 / 18
06 / 19
06 / 20
Start: 2:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

FOR THE SHORTEST SUNDAY OF THE YEAR, BLACK ROSE ANARCHIST LIBRARY
PRESENTS THE PETER WATKINS EPIC HISTORICAL RE-ENACTMENT OF THE
PARIS COMMUNE.

WITH PLENTY OF BREAKS, FOOD AND DRINK

$10 Vegan Dinner Included

Peter Watkins won the Independent/Experimental Film and Video Award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association for this film in 2005.

It is 5 hours and 40 minutes long so we will begin the show promptly at 2pm

06 / 21
06 / 22
06 / 23
06 / 24
06 / 25
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

It's cold outside, so we need our booze to be warm! Come and enjoy delicious hot toddies, play some cards, and appreciate some music. Bring some vinyl and your best card tricks!

06 / 26
06 / 27
Start: 6:00 pm

Sunday 27th (6pm)
The Day the Country Died
(A history of Anarcho-Punk 1980-1984)
A documentary by Roy Wallace, tracing the Anarcho-Punk
movement of the early 80's. Features interviews, footage and
music. Expect lots of Crass, Subhumans, Chumbawamba and
Liberty, among others.
(2007) $5 donation

Start: 6:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

(A history of Anarcho-Punk 1980-1984)
A documentary by Roy Wallace, tracing the Anarcho-Punk
movement of the early 80's. Features interviews, footage and
music. Expect lots of Crass, Subhumans, Chumbawamba and
Liberty, among others.
(2007) $5 suggested donation

06 / 28
06 / 29
06 / 30
07 / 1
07 / 2
07 / 3
07 / 4
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

$5 donation

Revolution
Dir: Hugh Hudson, UK, 1985. With Al Pacino, Sid Owen, Nastassja Kinski

A British-made film about the War of Independence was never likely to
succeed with American audiences, but the box-office failure of this
expensive, high-profile film did not necessarily stem from nationalistic
prejudice. Revolution is surprisingly even-handed. True, the American
patriots are portrayed as excitable rabble, but the sadistic British are
hardly the heroes of the film.

The closest the film comes to having a hero is Tom Dobbs (Al Pacino), an
illiterate widower looking after his young son, Ned (Sid Owen). Tom has
no political interests, but despite his best efforts to stay out of the
war, he becomes caught in the maelstrom. He is treated contemptuously by
both sides: the Americans force him to enlist and, after he deserts, a
group of British officers use him as their fox and chase him with dogs
in a hunting game. Predictably, his conversion to the American side
comes when Ned is thrashed by a British officer. Another formulaic
element is Tom’s relationship with the rebellious daughter of a loyalist
family (Natassja Kinski).

But Revolution is otherwise a rarity among historical films. The period
itself is not romanticised, but instead looks primitive and
impoverished. The war is a squalid affair, devoid of heroism. And Tom is
a victim rather than a shaper of events. Only his final statement
suggests that there is some form of progress or destiny in this story:
“We’re going to find us a place where there ain’t no one to bow down to,
where there ain’t no lord or lady better than you”.

The lack of historical uplift, together with the film’s murky visual
palette, and the director’s penchant for hand-held cameras and
long-takes, makes Revolution a distinctly challenging film, but not one
without value or interest.

But is it accurate? The war is defined here not simply as one between
Americans intent on liberty and their British oppressors, but as a civil
war between British colonists – whose sympathies change according to
which side is winning. It is a cynical view but one more accurate than
most films care to admit. Less impressively, 4 July never looked so
bleak: it is obvious that Revolution was filmed in England, and
apparently in a cold and wet winter.

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